Andrew Keller, FRS | |
Birth Name: | Andras Keller |
Birth Date: | 22 August 1925 |
Birth Place: | Budapest, Hungary |
Death Place: | Switzerland |
Citizenship: | Naturalized British |
Spouse: | Eva Bulhack |
Children: | Peter and Nicola |
Field: | Polymer physics |
Known For: | Crystallization of polymers |
Prizes: | See list |
Andras (Andrew) Keller FRS[1] [2] (22 August 1925 - 7 February 1999) was a naturalized British polymer scientist. He was Research Professor in Polymer Science, Department of Physics, University of Bristol, 1969β91, then professor emeritus.
Andras Keller was born in Budapest, the only child of Jewish parents. He entered the University of Budapest in 1943, and gained his BSc in chemistry cum laude in 1947. He began his PhD studies at the same university but his work was interrupted by the rapidly deteriorating political situation in Hungary in 1948. He fled to England, leaving behind a submitted but unexamined PhD thesis.[1] [3]
He took a position with Imperial Chemical Industries in Manchester, as technical officer in the Polymers Division, where he was given the task of working out how the physical structure ofpolymers affects crystallization. In 1955, he moved to the University of Bristol Physics Department as Research Assistant, under Charles Frank, heading a team financed by the Ministry of Supply (later Ministry of Aviation). Here, he began to further develop his ideas on crystallisation, and obtained his PhD in 1958.[1] Meanwhile, Keller had become a naturalized citizen of the UK in 1954[4] or 1955.[5]
A key part of his work at Bristol was his discovery in 1957 of chain folding in polymer crystals.[6] The findings were not universally accepted however, and there was much debate between opposing camps for many years to come. It came to a head at a Faraday Discussion in Cambridge in 1979.[7] It was an important meeting because βThe arguments thereafter moved from whether one believed in regular chain folding, or in no chain folding at all, to issues of the degree of regularity of the folding under the specific conditions of solidification of a particular material.β[1]
Keller retired in 1991. The occasion was marked by a conference that year on polymer physics at Bristol.[8]
Keller met Eva Bulhack, a Transylvanian Saxon from Romania, in England. They married in 1951, and had two children: Peter and Nicola.
Andrew Keller died of a heart attack on 7 February 1999 while on a skiing holiday in Switzerland.[5]